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Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Train Crash in Buenos Aires Kills At Least 49

February 22, 2012, 1:47 pm

By JENNIFER PRESTON and ROBERT MACKEY
Video broadcast by C5N, an Argentine news channel, of the moment a train hit a barrier in a station in Bueons Aires on Wednesday.

Updated | 2:09 p.m. A 7-year-old boy was among the first of the 49 people confirmed killed in a train crash in Buenos Aires that also left at least 550 people injured, according to local media reports, including the Buenos Aires Herald.

A packed train derailed at the Once Station, one of the city’s busy central train stations, and crashed at the end of the track about 8:30 a.m., trapping hundreds of commuters.

“There are people still trapped, people alive, and there may have been fatalities,” Argentina’s transport secretary, Juan Pablo Schiavi, told reporters before rescue workers, began removing the dead from the wreckage of twisted metal and shattered glass. According to Mr. Schiavi, the train was traveling at too high a speed when it approached the station, hitting the barrier at the end of the platform, crumpling the front engine and collapsing commuter rail cars behind it. Most of those killed were in the first two cars.

Video posted online by C5N, an Argentine news channel, showed security camera footage of the moment the train hit the barrier. The Argentine newspaper La Nacion’s report on the crash included two video clips shot from the platform shortly after the accident that show the damage to the train and passengers leaving the scene.

One of the passengers told reporters, according to local media reports: “I had people piled on top of me, none of us could move.”

Several witnesses appear to have recorded images of the scene in the immediate aftermath of the crash. One injured man even showed a television crew video he shot on his phone, as he waited for treatment.

This is the second deadly train crash in Argentina in recent months. In September, a train flew through the air after hitting a bus and smashed into another train, killing at least 11 people and injuring 250. A security camera at the train station captured video of that accident as well.

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Mar. 4, 2012 4:58 AM ET
2 trains collide in Poland killing 15
VANESSA GERA, Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PRESS STATEMENT OF NEWS VALUES AND PRINCIPLES

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The wreckage of collided trains lies, in Szczekociny, southern Poland, Sunday, March 4, 2012. Polish prosecutors have opened an investigation into how a train ended up on the wrong tracks after two engines collided head on late Saturday, killing 15 people and leaving 54 in hospitals. (AP Photo/Michal Legierski) POLAND OUT
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WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Two trains running on the same track collided head-on in southern Poland late Saturday, leaving 15 people dead and 56 injured — the country's worst train disaster in more than 20 years.

Several of the passengers were foreigners, including people from Ukraine, Spain and France, but none of them appeared to be among the dead or badly injured, Prime Minister Donald Tusk said.

An unnamed passenger interviewed on the all-news station TVN24 said he felt the force of the collision.

"I hit the person in front of me. The lights went out. Everything flew," he said. "We flew over the compartment like bags. We could hear screams. We prayed."


Rescue workers were bringing in heavy equipment Sunday to try and free a corpse from the mangled wreckage of the train, while the injured are being treated in several area hospitals. A doctor in one, Szymon Nowak, said many of the injured were in a serious condition, with some in artificially induced comas.

"It's a very, very sad day and night in the history of Polish railways and for all of us," Tusk said.

The accident in the southern town of Szczekociny comes less than three months before millions of football fans will start crisscrossing the country — many by train — to watch matches at the Euro 2012 football championships, which is being co-hosted by Ukraine.

Poland, which is still recovering from decades of communist rule, doesn't have the high-speed trains of Western Europe. However, it does offer fairly speedy service between some key cities, and trains are generally seen as safe and used by many in the country of 38 million.

Prosecutors have opened an investigation into how one of the trains ended up on the wrong track, but Tusk said it was too soon to draw any conclusions.

One train was traveling from the eastern city of Przemysl to Warsaw, while the other — on the wrong track — was heading south from Warsaw to Krakow. Maintenance work was being done on the tracks before the accident happened, officials said.


Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski also visited the site on Sunday.

The tragedy was the worst involving trains since 1990, when 16 people were killed in a collision involving two trains in the Warsaw suburb of Ursus. Since then, the most serious Polish rail accident was in 1997, when 12 people were killed in Reptowo.

The country's most deadly train disaster dates back to 1980, when 65 people were killed when a freight train collided with a passenger train near Otloczyn.


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